Long-Term Travel Gear List
When I spent all of 2011 on the road I slowly built up a gear list of all my stuff. I used it to keep notes about what was and wasn't working with my equipment for replacement as needed. This page is the home for those constantly-updated, formerly private notes, though there are also a few blog posts about gear here.
There's a thing with gear lists where people obsess about particular brands and models and having the exact right stuff. The best gear is the gear you already own. This is not a shopping list. Use this as a list of ideas for needs to fill and desirable qualities as you naturally have to replace things. I assembled this gear over the course of five years of travel before my long trip, a full year on the road, and years since. It includes obvious things like "pants" and less obvious tiny-but-occasionally-vital things like "rubber bands".

Asadullah Khan Ghalib
I think of gear like r/K selection theory: either get cheap things that are easily worn and replaced, or invest time and money in high quality equipment. For example: as nice as clever collapsible water bottles look, I buy a bottle of water every few weeks and toss it when it's dirty or I need the space. Either strategy works if you choose deliberately; inconsiderate selection means you'll waste money and be frustrated with your gear. The two strategies interrelate: buy cheap to get the experience to choose for quality. I share my choices in the hopes they help you make better choices, not because this is the one true gear list. Relatedly, I got a lot of ideas from Tynan's gear posts. And Matt Might's list includes tech gear and excellent tips.
Item links go to Amazon because it's popular, but in Chicago nearly all of this is available cheaper at local outdoors/travel stoors like Uncle Dan's and chains like REI or Moosejaw. Some products are unspecified because it simply doesn't matter (eg. toothpaste). But also, I don't link or list details for products branded with logos; if they're going to treat me like a billboard, fuck 'em.
Backpack
I have already written about what I look for in a backpack, so I'll just note that my bag is a GoRuck Radio Ruck (2013, 24L). In early 2014 they shook up their sizes and I think the best choice is the 26L GR1. Don't hesitate to buy a used GoRuck bag, they are very durable. I keep two Omega Pacific Lite D black carabiners on the internal or external webbing for hooking bags or paracording miscellania.
Previously I carried a Deuter Futura 28. As my gear slowly shrank I wanted a bag that blends in with commuters, and the suspension system that is so nice for hikes makes the bag awkward in every other situation.
My bag has one large internal compartment and a few internal pockets. This improves item lookup of small items from the unordered list's O(N/2) to a hash map's O(1), and similarly organizes this page.
Front pocket/pants pockets
Phone | |
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Currently | Geeksphone Keon |
Notes | I got this, my first smartphone, in 2013. I don't want to waste money on a computer I can't see/edit all the code to. So some of the later items of gear may seem odd. |
Considerations | I know there are all manner of international standards involving SIM cards and bands and Gs, but I found it much less awful to just buy a cheap phone card occasionally. |
Camera | |
Currently | Canon PowerShot S100 |
Notes | I only replaced my Canon PowerShot SD940IS because I mislaid it for most of a year. I'd recently bought the S100 so I sold off the SD940IS, but that was a mistake. The S100 is 2x too thick to comfortably fit in a pocket and be carried everywhere; I've taken far fewer photos because of this. |
Considerations |
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Pocket pen | |
Currently | Fisher Space Pen Stowaway, Black, Fisher Trekker Space Pen |
Considerations |
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Considered |
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Previously | Many ill-fated and destructive ballpoint pens |
Black marker | |
Currently | Sharpie permanent marker; Sharpie is simply the only choice |
Notes | Vital for labels and visible signs; don't get a click-top or it will eventually be accidentally deployed in your bag |
Flashlight | |
Currently | 4Sevens Quark AA, .2/240h 4L/48h 22L/6h 85L/1.5h 109L/1.2h, prism, clip |
Considerations |
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Future | Fenix E12 - 1xAA, 8L/40h 50L/6.5h 130L/1.5h; got a couple at $20 in an online sale |
Considered |
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Previously | Generic swag 3xAAA LED, sucked. I had no idea how often I wanted a good flashlight until I got one. |
USB flash drive | |
Currently | LaCie PetiteKey 32GB |
Considerations |
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Previously | Super Talent Pico Mini, 16GB |
Wristwatch | |
Currently | Timex Men's T49826 Expedition |
Notes | I know these are optional in the smartphone days, but I can't give mine up |
Considerations |
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Bandana | |
Notes | A thousand uses; a small flower sack towel may be superior |
Internal top pocket
Chapstick | |
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Sleep mask; Earplugs | |
Current | Cheap sleep mask from an airport store; nothing for it but to try a tew to find one that fits your face. Got a strong recommendation for Etymotic Research ER20 ETY-Plugs and picked up a pair, but I haven't had to use them in anger yet. |
Notes | This pair of items is vital for sleep or quiet downtime when traveling or stuck with noisy companions |
Previously | Generic foam earplugs |
Snacks | |
Food | A high-protein bar prompts satiety and in case of delay, is much cheaper than an airport meal |
Chocolate | An emergency supply. Missed a plane, got rained on, bit by bedbugs, and had a bunkmate who snored? Well, at least there's chocolate. |
Internal bottom pocket
Identity papers | |
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Currently | Passport, driver's licence, travel insurance papers, a few checks, unused currency in a small waterproof Aloksak |
First aid kit (also in an Aloksak) | |
Notes | Ignore brand names, buy by active ingredient |
anti-diarrhea | 2mg Loperamide HCl x6 (alternately, busmuth subsalicylate) |
antihistamine | 10mg Loratadine x30 (alternately, clorpheniramine, loratadine (Claritin), promethazine (also good for motion sickness), cinnarizine (same, less sedating), or meclizine; note that many antihistamines and sleep aids have the same active ingredient) |
antacid | 750mg calium carbonate (small roll of Tums); sheet famitodine 20mg |
antiseptic wipes | benzalkonium chloride 0.13% x3 |
antibiotic ointment | neomycin sulfate 3.5mg x2 |
burn aid | melaleuca oil 10mg/g (3.5g) |
Consumables |
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Laptop pocket
Laptop | |
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Previously | a Lenovo X1 Carbon, 3rd gen |
Considerations |
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Previously | a slim aluminum 13" netbook with obnoxious branding |
Ebook reader | |
Currently | Wifi Kindle Touch |
Previously | Four previous Kindles of various makes and models. I'm pretty hard on them, apparently. |
Notes | Amazon may be monopoly-abusing bastards, but their hardware is decent and commonly available at a pawn shop near you |
Main compartment
Thug bag
Even though the signs at the checkpoints often say liquids can only be 3oz, the actual rule, as written and as enforced, is 3.4oz (100ml).
Laundry soap | |
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Currently | Dr. Bronner's Castile Liquid Soap |
Notes | Handy as shampoo in a pinch, and covered in enterintaingly crazy writing. How to wash |
Considering | Soak no-rinse |
Insect repellant | |
Notes | If it doesn't have DEET, it doesn't work - but maybe lemon eucalyptus oil will change this |
Toothpaste | |
Sunscreen |
Electronics kit
Portable mouse | |
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Currently | ThinkPad Bluetooth Laser Mouse, 2xAA |
Notes | I own it for games, but it's also a lifesaver in graphics editing. This mouse fits my hand perfectly |
Considerations |
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Previously | Logitech Wireless travel mouse: quite nice, I only replaced because I beat it to death after a few years |
Dongles | |
Connections |
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Notes | Poke around on Amazon, cables are available in short ~6 inch lengths that pack very well. Watch out for cheaper "charging cables" that only have two pins for power; you want "data cables". There are also "switchable" cables that have retractable data pins so you can charge from someone else's device without the possibility of them syncing to it; I don't have experience with these and don't do enough charging that I find myself wanting these. |
Ethernet cable, 1m | |
Notes | You think you'll never need it, and then one day you'll try to quickly copy a lot of files, give a presentation with overwhelemed wifi, replace a failure on a business's computer you need to work... |
Music/video player | |
Currently | 5th gen iPod Nano |
Notes | Got as a gift long before I had a smartphone; still nice for light entertainment without running down the smone |
Headphones | |
Currently | Monoprice 8320 earbuds |
Notes | Often available for $6-7, can't be beat at that price |
HDMI cable | |
Currently | SMD Thin HDMI Cable |
Notes | For borrowing monitors, but mostly for sharing a movie on a hostel TV; this one is wonderfully small. A Chromecast/Amazon Fire stick might be a nice alternative. |
AA/AAA Battery charger | |
Currently | Eneloop AA USB charger |
Notes | Eneloop's batteries are simply the best rechargables available; with mouse and flashlight it takes less than 6 months to be cheaper than single-use, to say nothing of heavy metal waste |
Plug adapter | |
Currently | Kikkerland UL03-A Universal Travel Adapter |
Notes | This converts to every outlet I've ever seen but, notably, is not a voltage converter |
Sundries bag
Plastic bags | |
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Currently | 3-4 quart-sized ziplocs, 1-2 hefty trash bags, and 2-3 grocery bags, rolled and wrapped up by a half-dozen rubber bands |
Notes | The bags and rubber bands are constantly useful for leftovers, extra storage, rain protection, soaps, etc. etc. I also keep a half-dozen safety pins and paperclips clipped into the interior mesh pocket of my bag. |
Sewing kit | |
Currently | Lost, need to replace |
Notes | Dead weight for ages and then absolutely vital. Argggh. |
Shampoo bar | |
Currently | Lush Soak and Float (smells like a campfire); many fine options |
Notes | Not liquid, and lasts much longer than 3.4oz |
Visa pictures | |
Notes | Put on formal clothes and take a picture meeting the international passport photo requirements. Print a sheet, cut them, rubber band the stack, and store them. Now you're set for visa applications. |
Similarly | Photocopy your driver's license and passport, keep that in here, Dropbox, and with a friend who can be trusted to answer a middle-of-the-night call. This will help a lot if they get stolen. |
Light my Fire Spork | |
Notes | I think I lost this; can just grab plastic-wrapped utensil sets when I pick up fast food; this isn't commonly used |
Universal sink stopper | |
Notes | A flat-bottomed stopper is held in place by water pressure and very handy for doing laundry in random sinks |
Small camping mirror, handy for shaving | |
Toothbrush container, easier than replacing fancy travel toothbrushes | |
Tweezers, nail clipper, matches | |
Miscellaneous | |
Previously |
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Rope | |
Currently | 20m Rothco 550lb Type III paracord |
Notes | Handy for laces, ties, straps, and a dozen miscellaneous tasks I didn't notice until I started carrying it. You want the 7-strand core Type III paracord, sometimes reffered to as US military MIL-C-5040H to be pedantic. Great deals are common and counterfeit; this link goes to a slightly lower-grade but much cheaper version. Wrapped and then locked down by an equally useful bit of wire. |
Loose items and clothing
I used to keep clothes in Eagle Creek Compression Bags, but they were bulky, inconvenient, and wore out after a few months. Now I achieve much the space savings by "ranger rolling" clothing (this has many names). In short, you invert a flap of few inches of the garment (waistband of pants, waist of shirts, top of socks, etc.), fold into thirds (so the flap can be held in place by compression), tightly roll from the other end, and then wrap the flap over the roll. This may sound complex, but you will be an expert about the third time you try it. Here's good videos for: t-shirts, long-sleeve shirts, pants, towels, briefs, socks. Dirty clothes can be segregated in a separate plastic grocery bag or by leaving unrolled.
Much of the clothing listed is wool. Modern wool is softer and more comfortable than ten or twenty years ago, making it much superior to cotton in many ways: wool's more durable, wrinkles relax out of wool, wool doesn't stick to you to chill you when wet, wool dries faster and, best of all, wool is naturally bacteria-resistant so it takes longer to smell. You can get good clothing from Minus33, Terramar, and Icebreaker; though at any given time most have obnoxious logos.
USB wall charger/port muliplier | ||
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Currently | Belkin BZ103050-TVL | |
Notes | Lifesaver and friendmaker at airports, bus terminals, and other poorly-wired purgatories | |
Microfiber towel | ||
Currently | MicroNet Suede Microfiber towel | |
Notes | Get one a long enough to wrap around your waist and an alligator clip to hold it in place so you can walk from a hostel shower to room decently. Also useful for drying clothes: wrap them up in the towel, squeeze the water out (never wring clothes), and hand it up to dry in much less time. | |
Light bag | ||
Currently | Sea to Summit Ultra-Sil 20L Day Pack | |
Notes | Nice for carrying just the laptop, or some groceries | |
Previously | A swag Washington Post/Newsweek Interactive drawstring bag | |
Waterproof shell | ||
Currently | None | |
Previously |
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Consider |
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Down layer | ||
Currently | MontBell EX Light Down Jacket | |
Notes | This is a very light, thin, yet warm layer that comes with its own stuff sack. I had my eye on this for a couple years before I finally decided to buy it. Only one winter with it, but I'm quite happy. | |
Long sleeves | ||
Currently | Nau M2 hoodie | |
Notes | Lightweight, gets compliments but not stares, seems to be only intermittently in production | |
Considerations |
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Previously |
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T-shirts | ||
Currently | 2x Minus33 130g/m2 | |
Swim trunks | ||
Currently | Random pair from REI | |
Notes | Used to have a pretty bulky pair, but after keeping an eye out I found a lighter pair. Briefs are a little too exciting. Also, see next | |
Shorts | ||
Currently | Swim trunks | |
Currently | Random gym shorts | |
Notes | It's a shame that a Twelve Ways would be gender inappropriate. | |
Considerations | A zipper pocket for a key is vital, pockets tend to be shallow. Cotton will never dry. | |
Socks | ||
Currently | 3x light wool crew socks with terrible branding | |
Consider | Darn Tough socks | |
Underwear | ||
Currently | 3x boxers | |
Notes | A must-have: wicks moisture, resists odor, durable. Unfortunately the only brand I know of has heavy branding. | |
Pants | ||
Currently | Kuhl Renegade, gray. Not super happy with the highlight stitching and it started fraying after only a couple months. | </tr> |
Features wanted |
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Good | ||
Maybe |
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No |
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Winter kit | ||
Pieces |
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Notes | A Keffiyeh/Shemagh may be superior to the Buff, but has political baggage | |
Sandals | ||
Currently | Handmade by tracing my feet on a sheet of Vibram 7175 Cherry sole, punching holes between the first two toes and either side of the heel, and strining nylon rope; for a similar shoe you can pick up this kit | |
Notes | For beaches and hostel showers |